untitled

(Brent) #1
Ballard, W.B., Whitman, J.S. & Gardner, C.L. 1987. Ecology of an exploited wolf population
in south-central Alaska. Wildlife Monographs98:1–54.
Bamford, J. 1970. Estimating fat reserves in the brush-tailed possum, Trichosurus vulpeculaKerr
(Marsupialia: Phalangeridae).Australian Journal of Zoology18:415 – 425.
Barker, S.C., Singleton, G.R. & Spratt, D.M. 1991. Can the nematode Capillaria hepaticaregu-
late abundance of wild house mice? Results of enclosure experiments in southeastern
Australia. Parasitology103:439– 449.
Barr, W. 1991. Back from the Brink: The Road to Muskox Conservation in the Northwest
Territories. Komatik Series no. 3. The Arctic Institute of North America, University of Calgary.
Basson, M., Beddington, J.R. & May, R.M. 1991. An assessment of the maximum sustainable
yield of ivory from African elephant populations. Mathematical Biosciences104:73– 95.
Baum, J.K., Myers, R.A., Kehler, D.G., Worm, B., Harley, S.J. & Doherty, P.A. 2003. Collapse
and conservation of shark populations in the northwest Atlantic. Science299:389 –392.
Bayliss, M., Mellor, P.S. & Meiswinkel, R. 1999. Horse sickness and ENSO in South Africa.
Nature397:574.
Bayliss, P. 1987. Kangaroo dynamics. In: Caughley, G., Shepherd, N. & Short, J., eds.
Kangaroos: Their Ecology and Management in the Sheep Rangelands of Australia, pp. 119–134.
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Bazely, D.R. & Jefferies, R.L. 1989. Lesser snow geese and the nitrogen economy of a grazed
salt marsh. Journal of Ecology77:24 –34.
Beasom, S.L. & Roberson, S.F., eds. 1985. Game Harvest Management. Caesar Kleberg Wildlife
Research Institute, Kingsville, TX.
Beddington, J.R. 1975. Mutual interference between parasites or predators and its effect on search-
ing efficiency. Journal of Animal Ecology44:331–340.
Beier, P. 1996. Metapopulation models, tenacious tracking, cougar conservation. In:
McCullough, D., ed. Metapopulations and Wildlife Conservation, pp. 293–323. Island Press,
Washington, DC.
Beisner, B.E., Haydon, D.T. & Cuddington, K. 2003. Alternative stable states in ecology. Frontiers
in Ecology and Environment1:376 –382.
Bell, D.J., Oliver, W.L.R. & Goose, R.K. 1990. The hispid hare Caprolagus hispidus. In:
Chapman, J.A. & Flux, J.E.C., eds. Rabbits, Hares and Pikas: Status Survey and Conservation
Action Plan, pp. 128 –136. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland.
Bell, R.H.V. 1970. The use of the herb layer by grazing ungulates in the Serengeti. In: Watson,
A., ed. Animal Populations in Relation to their Food Resources, pp. 111–124. 10th Symposium
of the British Ecological Society. Blackwell, Oxford.
Bell, R.H.V. 1971. A grazing ecosystem in the Serengeti. Scientific American225:86 – 93.
Bell, R.H.V. 1981. An outline of a management plan for Kasungu National Park, Malawi. In:
Jewell, P.A., Holt, S. & Hart, D., eds.Problems in Management of Locally Abundant Wild Mammals,
pp. 69– 89. Academic Press, New York.
Bell, R.H.V. 1982. The effect of soil nutrient availability on community structure in African
ecosystems. In: Huntly, B.J. & Walker, B.H., eds. Ecology of Tropical Savannas, pp. 193–216.
Springer-Verlag, New York.
Belovsky, G.E. 1978. Diet optimization in a generalist herbivore: the moose. Theoretical
Population Biology14:105–134.
Belovsky, G.E. 1986. Generalist herbivore foraging and its role in competitive interactions. American
Zoologist26:51–69.
Belovsky, G.E. 1988. Food plant selection by a generalist herbivore: the moose. Ecology
62:1020 –1030.
Belovsky, G.E., Ritchie, M.E. & Moorehead, J. 1989. Foraging in complex environments: when
prey availability varies over time and space. Theoretical Population Biology36:144 –160.
Belsky, A.J. 1987. The effects of grazing: confounding of ecosystem, community and organism
scales. American Naturalist129:777–783.

REFERENCES 403

WECD03 08/17/2005 04:55PM Page 403

Free download pdf